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Sep 2016

I know the benefits of having your own website for your comic to live in and posting updates, and extra stuff that you can't do on tapastic.
But where do I start? What are good website builders I can use that will have the plugins I need to host my comic?
Like putting in like buttons and comment sections and extra tabs to put my concept art snd FAQs for the characters and a shop, etc.

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    Sep '16
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    Sep '16
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I know a lot of people use tumblr with this webcomic layout5 (Follow The Leader3, for example), or wordpress with the comic press2 or comic easel1 templates (such as Larkspur1). Both of those sites are easily customisable, although you might need some basic coding knowledge if you want to make any drastic layout changes.

Personally I use smackjeeves3 and altered the "cold" layout from this list (here's my site2) but if you're just starting out I'd recommend using tumblr, where you can attach your own domain name for free once you've bought one.

There are some fabulous topics that already touch on this:

http://forums.tapastic.com/t/personal-comic-website-webdesign-and-seo/9736

The responses are really great! I think you might find an answer there. smile

Thanks, but I mainly need help with how, and what tools to build my site with than the benefits. Those I already understand.

Thanks for the advice. I have heard of Wordpress, but I can't code. So I'll check out Smakjeeves and see what's up lol.

For something completely free I'd sign up at http://wordpress.com2 (note that this is quite different from wordpress.org). The commenting system is built in with social media integration as well. The only issue is that the templates and customization are limited so your site could end up looking like...well...just another wordpress site. There's no actual coding required and this is actually one of the largest communities on the internet if you're looking to reach beyond webcomics.

Weebly is another free site builder but there's no commenting system. You can build a nice site and a shop by dragging and dropping page elements but it's quite limited in terms of looks as well.

Then there's self-hosting - which is not as difficult as it seems and you have complete control over everything in your site. In the end, the pricing works out much cheaper than squarespace - which is actually where I'm moving from. I'm setting up a new self-hosted wordpress site using siteground1 which has a 30 day money back guarantee and great support system to help out. They have a site builder through weebly if you like their templates - I believe it's the commercial version too so there's more options for running a shop. They also use scripts which are literally one click installations and there's tons of documentation to help out on the way.

side note: If you are using self-hosted wordpress you can install all sorts of plugins and themes that are not available on wordpress.com and still integrate with that network using this plugin called jetpack. (ie. your posts will show up in the wordpress reader which has a huge readership)

The cheapest self-hosting option I've found is asmallorange1 but I found their support to be quite lacking.

No matter which route you take there's always a learning curve to setting things up but nowadays you can build a pretty decent site without coding a single line.

What I suggest is see exactly what you want from your website. Is it just your comic or are you world building? Take notes from various websites and compare them. Take notes on the ones you like. Then, sketch out your layout. Just like your comic, you want to sketch out how you want it to look and design it!

If you dont know how to code, there are many websites (like wix) where you can drag and drop buttons where you want them to be and then hyperlink them.

I use Comicfury, with all the customization options it might just as well be "your own site" except you don't own the domain

There's lots of customizable base themes, both HTML and simple editor